Tubby Raymond Field at Delaware Stadium

Delaware Stadium (Tubby Raymond Field), one of the finest facilities in the country at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision level and home of the 2003 National Champion Blue Hen football team, begins its 62nd season of action in 2013-14.

In addition to the football team calling the venue its home, the University of Delaware men's and women's lacrosse squads have played their home games at Delaware Stadium since the 2010 season.

Delaware Stadium will serve as the site of the NCAA Division I men's lacrosse quarterfinals on Sunday, May 18. It will mark the fourth time that Delaware has served as a host site for NCAA men's lacrosse tournament competition.

Erected in 1952 and enlarged prior to the 1964, 1970, 1972 and the 1975 seasons, the 22,000-seat stadium is the second largest in the Colonial Athletic Association and one of the largest in the nation in FCS football.

Delaware Stadium also underwent extensive renovations in 1992-1993. The stadium’s grass surface received a new drainage/irrigation system and new bleachers were installed in the East and West grandstands and the North End Zone. The grass surface was replaced in the spring of 2007.

In December, 2009, the grass was removed and a synthetic FieldTurf was installed by Clark Companies of New Delhi, N.Y., one of the nation’s leaders in turf installation. The Blue Hen men’s lacrosse team played its home games this spring on the new turf, and both UD lacrosse squads will play at Delaware Stadium in 2011.

Delaware celebrated the 50th anniversary of the facility in 2002, producing a poster and recognizing players from the first Blue Hen teams (1952-55) to play in Delaware Stadium as part of an Oct. 5 ceremony.

Another highlight of the 2002 campaign came in the season-opening win over Georgia Southern Aug. 29 when the Delaware Stadium playing surface was dedicated as Tubby Raymond Field, recognizing Delaware’s College Football Hall of Fame head coach who retired following the 2001 season after compiling 300 victories in 36 seasons. Raymond was on hand to pass the football off to new head coach K.C. Keeler prior to the game. Most of the team captains from Raymond’s 36 teams were also in attendance to celebrate the evening.

The 22,000-seat stadium received a new look prior to the 2000 season as eight poles of permanent broadcast-quality lights were installed by Musco Lighting. In addition, the South End Zone bleachers were also replaced.

As part of the new bleachers, the Blue Hen football team now enters Delaware Stadium from a brick runway underneath the stands directly behind the goalposts on gameday. The team’s smoke-filled exit from the tunnel on to Raymond Field through a gauntlet of Blue Hen Marching Band members lining the field is one of the highlights of football Saturdays at Delaware Stadium.

A plaque which lists the accomplishments of past Blue Hen football teams along with a football hangs from the runway. A new tradition was started in 2000 as Delaware players jump up to touch the plaque before entering the field.

The largest Delaware Stadium crowd was the 23,619 spectators that watched the Blue Hens host Temple, Oct. 27, 1973. Temple won that game 31-8.

Since the stadium opened, Delaware has drawn 22,000 or more fans 55 times, including a season-high 22,075 fans Sept. 9, 2000 vs. The Citadel in the first night game under the new lights.

Delaware Stadium attendance records have consistently been broken over the last several years as the Blue Hens drew an average of 22,280 fans during the 2004 regular season, breaking the previous mark of 21,163 set in 2003. Delaware’s home attendance average of 20,750 during the 2009 season ranked fourth among all NCAA FCS institutions.

Delaware was the only school at the NCAA FCS level to average over 20,000 fans for regular season games over a span of 11 seasons from 1999-2009. Delaware Stadium had drawn at least 20,000 fans in 44 straight regular season games prior to the 2009 home finale against Hofstra.

Delaware Stadium opened November 15, 1952, with the Blue Hens edging past Lafayette, 13-12, on two touchdowns by halfback Kenny Reith on a cold and rainy afternoon.

Entering the 2013 football season, the Blue Hens have played 383 games in Delaware Stadium – posting a record of 288-91-4, a winning percentage of .757 over 61 seasons.

The Blue Hens are 20-5 in 25 NCAA playoff games played at Delaware Stadium, including a 2-1 mark during the 1997 and 2000 seasons and a perfect 3-0 mark in 2003 when the Hens easily downed Southern Illinois, Northern Iowa, and Wofford on the way to the national championship game.

In 2004 Delaware defeated Lafayette, 28-14, in the first round of the NCAA I-AA playoffs, while in 2007 the Blue Hens defeated Delaware State, 44-7, in the first ever matchup between the state’s two FCS teams. In 2010, Delaware stormed back Lehigh, New Hampshire, and Georgia Southern at home to advance to yet another FCS title game appearance.

The stadium is at the center of the David M. Nelson Athletic Complex that includes the $20.5 million Bob Carpenter Center, a 5,000-seat multi-purpose facility south of the stadium that opened in August, 1992, and the $3.3 million Fred P. Rullo Jr. Stadium, a 2,000-seat lighted ActionTurf field which opened in September, 1998.

The Blue Hen field hockey team plays its home games at Rullo Stadium, which played host to the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association North-South Senior Men’s Lacrosse All-Star Game in June, 2000 as well as the U.S. Men’s Lacrosse Team tryouts in 2001. In addition, local high schools play field hockey and lacrosse games at Rullo Stadium as do several area colleges.

The Carpenter facility, named in honor of UD’s longtime trustee and supporter, houses the Blue Hen football and basketball programs as well as offices, the Chuck Hall Memorial Weight Room, athletic training facilities for the football program, and a VIP center with a view to Delaware Stadium.

The Nelson athletic complex is named in honor of David M. Nelson, Delaware’s longtime football coach, athletic director, and dean who passed away in 1992.

The BCC served as home to the NBA Philadelphia 76ers basketball club pre-season training camp in the fall of 1995 and 1996 and in 2013-14 will serve for the first time as the home of the Sixers' U.S. Developmental Basketball team the 87ers.

The University of Delaware athletic complex also includes 360-by-180-foot Delaware Field House, eight athletic fields - including 2,000-seat Bob Hannah Stadium, the Delaware Softball Field, the $4.5 million Ice Skating Science Development Center featuring two full-sized ice rinks, and an outdoor swimming pool.

The Delaware Mini-Stadium, located just east of Delaware Stadium, includes a grass field for soccer and a quarter-mile all-weather track. The new track was installed in 2000 along with permanent lights.

Two lighted football practice fields as well as the Delaware Field House Tennis Courts are part of the complex. New lights were installed on the practice field prior to the 2001 season.

Delaware Stadium's outstanding facilities earned its selection as the host site for the 1984 and 1986 Division I NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship games and for two NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Tournament first round games in May, 2002.

Other events held in the stadium include the annual Blue-Gold Delaware High School Football All-Star game and University of Delaware graduation ceremonies. Delaware Stadium has been the site of the Blue-Gold All-Star game every year since the game was instituted in the 1950’s.

The last 18 Delaware Blue-Gold High School All-Star games, held annually in late June and featuring the top players in the state, have been played at night.

Delaware Stadium hosted its first collegiate night game (using portable lights) Aug. 31, 1991 when the Hens defeated rival West Chester 28-0 in the Texaco Star Classic. Delaware has hosted 20 night games all-time, posting an impressive record of 17-3.

Delaware Stadium Attendance Records (entering 2013 season)

Temple - Oct. 27, 1973 - 23,619

Navy - Sept. 9, 1985 - 23,110

Navy - Nov. 14, 1987 - 23,100

William & Mary - Oct. 18, 1986 - 23,045

Colgate - Nov. 19, 1977 - 23,019

Connecticut - Nov. 7, 1992 - 22,911

Maine - Oct. 28, 1989 - 22,805

Lehigh - Oct. 3, 1981- 22,784

Towson - Sept. 11, 2004 - 22,782

New Hampshire - Sept. 2, 2004 - 22,727

Villanova - Nov. 1, 1980 - 22,680

Bucknell - Nov. 18, 1972 - 22,648

Maine - Nov. 2, 1991 - 22,601

Temple - Oct. 30, 1971 - 22,582

Northern Michigan - Oct. 18, 1980 - 22,555

Lehigh - Sept. 10, 2005 - 22,537

West Chester Sept. 8, 2007 22,495

Temple - Sept. 19, 1981 - 22,379

West Chester - Sept. 17, 2005 - 22,331

West Chester - Sept. 9, 2006 - 22,329

New Hampshire - Oct. 5, 1991 - 22,304

Massachusetts - Oct. 22, 1988 - 22,301

Maine - Oct. 28, 1995 - 22,293

James Madison - Oct. 26, 1996 - 22,291

West Chester - Sept. 20, 1986 - 22,221

Sports at this Facility

Football

Men's Lacrosse

Women's Lacrosse

Features

Sports and Convocation Stadium

Accessibility

Policies

Directions to Delaware Stadium

From the North and the East : I-95 South to Delaware exit 1-B, Route 896 north. Delaware Stadium is located on the right, after Routes 4/896 intersection and between the Bob Carpenter Center and the Delaware Field House.

From the South and the West: I-95 North to Maryland Exit 109B, Route 279 north (also called Route 2). Proceed on this road which becomes Elkton Road into Newark. Turn right at the intersection of Routes 2 (279) and 4. Turn left at intersection of Routes 4/896. The Delaware Stadium is located on the right, between the Bob Carpenter Center and the Delaware Field House.